The former front man of the Irish fusion band, O’Malley’s March, who also incidentally, is the two-term Governor
of Maryland, served noticed of a possible run for 2016 after agreeing to a speaking engagement in March 2013 in
Charleston, South Carolina – only 500 miles and two states south of Annapolis. Nothing unusual about that,
right?

That aside, Maryland’s remarkable drop in crime statistics, number one national ranking of public schools, $1b
cash reserves, 8th fastest post-recession national recovery rate, and number one rank for Innovation and
Entrepreneurship, are things that any potential candidate would love to have on their resume.

Former Governor O'Malley announced his bid for the 2016 Democratic presidential nomination on May 30, 2015 in
Baltimore.

Former Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley is accepting public financing for his presidential campaign, making him the first major-party candidate to accept public financing since Republican John McCain in 2008.

LAS VEGAS — Former Maryland governor Martin O’Malley intensified his attacks against the two other Democratic presidential candidates here Sunday, accusing both opponents of having a cautious and outdated approach to immigration issues.

Democratic presidential hopeful Martin O’Malley used an appearance Monday night on “The Daily Show” on Comedy Central to attack Hillary Rodham Clinton, accusing the former senator from New York of being too close to Wall Street to protect Americans from the “excesses” of big financial institutions.

Even in his deep-blue home state of Maryland, former Gov. Martin O'Malley is a distant fourth in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination, according to the results of a Washington Post/University of Maryland poll released Monday.

When it comes to questions surrounding former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's email practices Martin O'Malley, one of the people challenging her for the Democratic presidential nomination, says he'll leave that to the press.

In a bid to climb his way into the thick of the presidential race, Democrat Martin O’Malley will launch a three-week, more than 15-stop tour of Iowa on Friday to promote a set of new policy proposals, his campaign told POLITICO late Wednesday.